A recent peer-reviewed study reveals overlooked mining impacts and shifting global dynamics shaping the future of electric vehicle sustainability.
In July 2025, a peer-reviewed study published in the journal Nature raised important concerns about the sustainability of lithium-ion batteries used in electric vehicles (EVs), highlighting the environmental and social challenges posed by their raw material extraction and production processes.
While EVs are often championed as a cleaner alternative to fossil fuel cars, the research has highlighted that the battery supply chain currently entails significant environmental costs, particularly regarding lithium, cobalt, nickel, and copper mining.
Mining lithium, a critical battery component, requires extensive water usage: up to half a million gallons per ton — primarily extracted from fragile ecosystems such as the salt flats in South America’s “Lithium Triangle” (Chile, Bolivia, Argentina). This leads to water depletion and soil contamination, affecting local communities and their livelihoods. Similarly, cobalt mining, mainly in the Democratic Republic of Congo, raises ethical concerns due to toxic exposure risks, and the involvement of child labor in hazardous conditions. Nickel and copper mining also entail heavy environmental degradation, including deforestation, habitat destruction, and pollution.
When climate goals meet geopolitical challenges
Beyond environmental concerns, the EV battery sector faces growing geopolitical and trade pressures. Recent U.S. tariffs on Chinese imports of critical minerals such as lithium, cobalt, and nickel have disrupted supply chains, prompting China and other mining powerhouses to impose export controls in retaliation. This tit-for-tat has heightened costs, fueled price volatility, and exposed America’s heavy reliance on foreign sources for these materials. Manufacturers are now scrambling to diversify supply, invest in alternative mining regions, and explore recycling and new chemistries like sodium-ion batteries, but in the near term, these tensions threaten to slow production and complicate the transition to sustainable electric mobility.
Despite these challenges, EV batteries currently remain crucial to reducing carbon emissions over the vehicle’s lifetime compared to gasoline cars. However, the upfront carbon footprint from battery production is substantial, requiring improvements in mining practices and battery manufacturing to reduce environmental impact.
The study advocates for advancing green technologies, including recycling and reuse of EV batteries, which currently happens for only a small fraction of used batteries globally. Innovations such as “green lithium mining” powered by renewable energy, and the development of alternative battery chemistries (e.g., cobalt-free or sodium-based batteries) offer promising pathways towards sustainability.
Ultimately, the authors argue, achieving truly sustainable electric mobility demands collective efforts across industry, policymakers, and consumers to promote responsible sourcing, enhance battery recycling, and minimize ecological harm. On this basis, the researchers feel that industries should develop more water-based recycling processes that avoid using complex instrumentation, expensive materials, or toxic and polluting organic solvents.